Book Read Free

To the Occupant

Page 3

by Emma Neale


  for their concert’s one ‘edgy’ modern piece.

  His pale-blue denim jacket, skinny jeans, DM boots,

  lip gloss, mascara, the dark blond, afro-dahlia of his hair

  stir squawks and eddies of disturbance in the audience

  as if a toddler mock airbombs a flock of drowsy pigeons.

  Yet his long spine still straightens for the count;

  he hits the rhythm’s clip, smooth and tight—

  so at the song’s end, after storms of applause,

  whooped delight, and above the widening pool of quiet

  even the thin, sky-pitched whistles

  conjured from someone’s failing hearing-aids

  seem like the cries of tiny, pink-throated larks

  carolling jubilation.

  Tag

  From the tangle of trees

  by the Warrender Street steps

  near where city council crews have been deleting

  the fuck-cunts and dick pics sprayed on the path,

  sharper than the doof-doof of the stereo

  from a student party in the valley’s dank trench,

  comes the sound of castanets.

  Someone drunk has peeled away from the party

  to climb this high; camouflaged now

  as sky puzzle, green-stitched twig-work

  so all we can see is sycamore sway, azaleas,

  rhododendrons in their flamenco blaze.

  They clatter again, tik-tik-ticka-chicka!

  Closer now, it’s clear we’d got it wrong;

  it is the hard bead rattle

  as someone preps and shakes aerosol paint.

  Doggeding up the steps we scan

  the ragged branch and bloomscape

  for what little punk might be so half-cut

  they’d even graffiti-cuss the trees—

  ah quick-quick-look, there there he is

  that small sleek agile man

  in his hooded, beaked, silken onesie—

  trickster korimako

  bellbird, mimic bird, can-bird:

  in great neon streams now

  he tags the air with song—

  bird iz here! bird lovez azaleaz! bird lovez birdz!

  Two Birds Billing

  >x x<

  Desire

  Be rid of this red ire

  Sire.

  rise,

  and

  It Goes Without Saying

  *

  —

  …

  Aubade

  After the bird’s first small enquiries

  cdec? cdec?

  love turns, soft awake

  makes embrace song’s corollary.

  Sheetweb Spider

  For weeks, a spider sits on the white ceiling

  a small, dark star of muscle and mind.

  We could navigate

  the boat of our bed by her

  if we ever wake marooned

  or terrified by

  the salt-blue expanse

  of time and tide beyond

  the known tomorrows

  that wait for no mantra

  from any of broken us, my love.

  The spider hunches;

  silent nun

  her white prayer flags

  spun on thin air

  a Zen pin

  on the light’s cartography—

  hold this stillness

  until this stillness holds.

  Here,

  you are.

  Blue Rubato

  Outside an inner-city high school

  near a gutter glum with rubbish

  (licked yoghurt pots, brown fruit peel)

  the itinerant music teacher

  scalp polished as clarinet keys

  bends slightly to the side while his palms lift

  as if to pray for just one pupil steeped in genius.

  His mouth puckers a little and—

  Whoa, he’s got it bad, can’t contain

  desire’s blood tango: side-steps in a swoon,

  air-kisses an absent lover,

  hallucinates fragrance on orchid-smooth skin …

  Wrong. As we walk in closer,

  his hands adjust position

  so he can hold the world’s smallest oboe:

  as we pass, we tilt our heads to catch

  his spontaneous street solo,

  pianissimo as the kazoo

  of a bee mid-air-doodle—

  nope. Hey-ho. He’s ducked aside

  to protect a Zippo from the wind.

  His cigarette blows a blue rubato.

  Trainee Emo

  His heart feels as if it swings its socks and shoes in one hand only to discover prickle-grass under its pale and tender feet

  No, his heart feels like a pink geranium craning to see into the gardener’s window, just after half its branches have been hacked off

  No, his heart is the black security strap on a trampoline’s edge-padding: dangling, growing a thin coat of moss: essential, but ignored

  No, his heart is like a stinging eyelid he can’t scratch for fear he’ll smudge his eyeliner and draw his family’s attention to it: as if they know anything about him

  No, his heart feels like the large itchy lumps brought on by eating something delicious but highly allergenic

  No, don’t be an arse, his heart feels like the smudge on the wall where his sister hit a bluebottle with a Nerf bullet: unbelievably sick and fluky death

  No, his heart feels like the dog-eared page the ideal reader actually never turns back to

  You know, his heart could go on like this forever,

  but the aroma of his mother’s croque monsieur

  serenades on its irresistible pan-pipes

  through the light-gap under his door

  so he Rapunzels himself down

  from his towering melancholy,

  vows to treat all family jokes

  as he would the tear-sting of Tabasco:

  swallow the burning words.

  Asks quietly for a glass of cow’s.

  Sonnet for Mr Ponting, HOD Maths & Economics

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  I upset Mr Ponting today with my immature facetious reaction to eating in economics class like a budgie.

  But I’d probably upset him more if I dared show the edits

  Mum scrawls on all the lines he sets for detention

  (today, blunt eyebrow pencil in ‘Midnight Burlesque’ all over my loose-leaf)

  or worse, if he saw the slurs she scrawls on their reverse.

  Not everyone’s as gaga on grammar as she is: not even teachers.

  Don’t think I’m meek. Just resigned. Money geeks like him have already scored the earth.

  Distance

  It was the first spring the child realised

  he had seen other springs

  and had grown his own memories.

  ‘So—not very long till you are old!’ he cried

  with a quarter smile, flummoxed

  by his own smug-sad wisdom

  and the pain that flew in

  through the mind’s skylight

  was so swift and silvering,

  I plunged my nose into the magnolia’s bowl,

  I plunged it again to the pale spray of
wild plum,

  its flowers the size of the metal snap-domes

  on a baby’s stretch ’n’ grow;

  then asked, ‘Do they have a scent? Can you tell?’

  He copied. ‘Mmmm, they do. It’s beautiful,

  but it’s very, very faint—as if we’re looking

  out of the backs of our minds.

  Or feel it from a hill very far beside the sky.’

  As if we can only know some things

  at a distance. From years away, say.

  Or the granular, woven light of a page.

  Small Wonder

  Our youngest, back home from his nana’s,

  catapults himself into the kitchen on the sprung elastic

  of a secret he says he can never, ever tell.

  I set a knife aside, towel my hands dry,

  clasp him close and say, ‘Hey, hey,

  little one, hey? ’

  He pushes in hard at the sides of his mouth

  as the blue-green fire of his irises

  brims and flickers, swells and burns.

  He pounces at his own impulsive tongue

  so it’s trapped between two knuckles

  the way a cat will paw-slam a skink;

  and again with both hands

  in some odd, kitschy copy of an Edvard Munch,

  he stretches down his bottom lip

  —so I’m braced for a tale

  of rapscallion shenanigans: muck and break,

  sweet-thievery from Nana’s biscuit tins;

  felt-pen sunglasses and beer can

  scribbled on a Jesus bookmark,

  or water-pistol bulls-eyed! at her corkboard

  with its ancient Xeroxed articles

  that frown, ‘Would YOU want monkeys for uncles?’

  or warn, ‘Harry Potter: Gateway Drug to Satan’.

  ‘Did some trouble come up at Nana’s?’

  ‘No! ’ and his wail says he’s battled the urge to tell

  for the entire afternoon …

  I have to promise not to laugh.

  Not to pass it on.

  I have to promise again, promise.

  I have to close the door, yes, bend down,

  so he can whisper inside his hands

  that are cupped now like a cloche

  to ward off admonishment’s frost,

  block disbelief’s

  orange wire-cutter beaks,

  protect the pale-pink nimbus

  of his secret

  as it buds, opens.

  Bilingual

  At our seven-year-old’s school, there’s a new pupil.

  His name is Huiseong Song: Korean for bright star.

  ‘That’s cool!’ our son exclaims.

  ‘He sounds like the song of songs,

  ‘the most singing-est of songs!’

  Our tousled pipistrelle in ripped black jeans,

  he shins up a tree and cries, ‘Hey, Huiseong! Hi! ’

  Joy’s echolocation, afternoon serenade

  in the playground the children have christened,

  like some old-time ship, The Adventure.

  Below the climbing frame’s mock-rigging, moored

  in caution’s vertigo, his mother confides

  fear’s limbo: for Huiseong knows no English.

  Yet—see how he close-reads hands and feet

  for grip and swing, scoot and climb.

  drop and land and run; the children’s step and leap

  are smoke, are sails, are flags;

  are pale-gold flashes marked on black bark,

  sticks laid like arrows on fresh mud,

  light brush strokes on day’s blue scroll.

  Just one week later, when I ask, ‘How’s Huiseong?’

  Our son grins, finds him, cups his elbow;

  with an ‘On your marks, get set, go!’

  side by side they run and rise;

  they clamber, they tree-hide,

  they You’re In, they Not-It,

  agile under leaf-steeples,

  limber in sun-time,

  fluent, already, in the fleet code-switch

  between a wilding self and first other-kin.

  Dark Glass

  Against all the winter mind has dreaded: spring again.

  We worry, is it too early, will it thrive?

  The foamhead of blossoms rushes up the dark, glassy branches

  as if festive Prosecco has been spilled well before the wedding, the win.

  Optimism, too, stupidly, biologically brims, as I hurry into the city dusk

  expecting young crowds tipsy with what they think is wine,

  though the zing is really the fumes and flint of their own swift blood.

  The stances of a man and a woman in a doorway

  short the night as if hidden wires touch—

  though there is ample space between them.

  They radiate something the way a snake’s hooded head does.

  Or the scorpion’s curved tail.

  Animal. Angular. Their voices rise higher. Blunt but chopped.

  What I catch is you said,

  I never, you always, you can’t.

  And in the middle, against the shop’s boarded-up door,

  there is a small girl calling, ‘Mummy, no! Daddy, stop!’

  And the parents slip strange quick sly looks over their shoulders

  though there is plenty of history left in the clip, they don’t stop—

  you just, I told you, you didn’t,

  the same accusations

  that corner me here,

  shame-crouched

  clicking through keys like a rosary,

  because I did not stop, turn back, or speak.

  I did not.

  My Aunt’s Story

  She tells me of when she and her twin were only eight,

  on a family visit south to meet their own brand-new aunt,

  a young émigrée due to arrive and settle

  in a small antipodean riverside town.

  As Sunday-crisp and silken as rosettes, ribbons,

  the townsfolk gathered on the station platform

  all there with fresh-picked posies, handmade signs,

  to greet my great-uncle’s Welsh war bride.

  Sun-struck gossamer, expectation itself seemed afloat, alight,

  as both twins clutched confetti, watched the train arrive.

  Yet even before my aunt’s own foreign aunt

  had stepped her way along the narrow aisle

  they saw her infants through the carriage window.

  My grandmother warned, urgent and low,

  ‘Hide your confetti, children. Quickly. Hide it,’

  then hugged them tight from pressing forward.

  Horror’s echo in gaunt and bone. The almost unspeakable real.

  Another aunt, in whispered shock: But they look like Belsen babies.

  So as when the starved, to heal,

  must first be served the plainest meal

  the bouquets, confetti, the banners enamelled with joy

  were lowered, concealed; for now they seemed to blare and bloat,

  too much, too rich, too soon for history’s

  Blitz-shocked, harrowed envoys.

  Still

  When young, I used to think

  a solitary on a public bench

  must be mournfully isolate,

  soul full-sore from thought’s arid trek,

  gaze plunged inwards, sifting the past’s thick clag

  to try to mine again the ember-gleam

  of optimism, or love’s gold-foiled veins.

  Yet now the world feels city-crammed, fierce-frantic,

  a disco dystopia drugged by greed-eats-need,

  a singleton moored in thought on a park bench

  seems a gifted votary of silence,

  a living icon of some secret

  south seas paradise

  of the stilled and quiet mind.

  Camellia Trees

  When she was five sh
e went boldly into the world

  all on her not-telling alone; hiked a great distance,

  brave, she thought it, to break out of the dust-cloth hours

  of boredom; in her head, a small voice sang

  she walked ache-rs and ache-rs; ache-rs and ache-rs she roamed;

  sturdily she forged into the soft and secret gloam made below

  the camellia trees discovered by her travels;

  crawled into their green cave hiddenly;

  crouched under the crinkled pink fabrics,

  afloat on the loam-sweet scent, soil plush as rabbit paws,

  the small beetles and ladybirds trusting enough

  to adorn her fingers like mobile jewels—

  emerald, garnet, onyx; the colours too

  of the quiet, the privacy, the dusk,

  the benevolence of trees stooped low

  like close angelic attendants in old church windows

  shiny as thin-sucked lemon drops, barley twists—

  yes, she would like to turn back even now,

  although she guesses in truth the trees

  were just along a neighbourhood fence;

  knows she could only stand there,

  elephantine, sigh-worn, mind sleep-grained

  as when woken too soon by children

  who clamour to open their dollhouse again;

  the taste of straw and mash coating her mouth,

  the ache in her joints of hill climbs, sway-spine,

  someone in the years’ long night

  must have slipped her into harness, behind her a cart

  that cries with ragged chattels, the laden cases

  of these are your days, darlings,

  you must shoulder them, shoulder them.

  Withdrawn

  It is not within the scope of this poem

  to discuss the failure of successive governments

  to address the glaring discrepancies

  between all the different weights and shades

  of human pain—

  but suffice to say that today,

  on George Street in Dunedin, 2017,

  I saw a thin young man

  in a sleeping bag

  on top of a flattened cardboard box

  with a disposable cup for coins at his side

  and he couldn’t look up

  when he thanked us

 

‹ Prev